Electric_Kite wrote:
Sidelines, yeah. If you know what to look for you can turn a good profit buying stuff at thrift stores and selling it on ebay. I know somebody who does, helps pay for college.
My husband and I were full-time ebay Powersellers for years selling antique furniture and collectibles (mostly Mid Century Modern/Danish Modern).
You can make a full time living at it, but it can be a lot of work. We sold lots of large furniture (especially sofas) so we spent more of our time packing and crating things for freight shipping as well as visiting thrift shops and garage sales for more inventory than we did photographing and listing them.
If we were planning to go to a particular area/state to hit the thrift shops, sometimes we timed our visit to coincide our visit with an item delivery so we could charge for shipping and keep the money for ourselves (to pay for gas, etc.).
Fun, but the hours were long and one day blended into another, so it was as much a lifestyle as a business and you have to be pretty organized.
Obviously, selling larger items can be more lucrative than selling smaller items (like CDs, electronic parts, and books) but smaller items take far less time/materials to pack and can make money if you sell a large volume of them.
_________________
?How I wish that somewhere there existed an island for those who are wise and of good will.?--Albert Einstein
INTJ.